Free speech news: NetChoice, Taylor Swift, October 7, and Satan

So to Speak: The Free Speech PodcastEp. 207
Free speech news: NetChoice, Taylor Swift, October 7, and Satan

Free speech news: NetChoice, Taylor Swift, October 7, and Satan

On today's free speech news roundup, we discuss the recent NetChoice oral argument, Taylor Swift, doxxing, October 7 fallout on campus, and Satan in Iowa.

Joining us on the show are Alex Morey, FIRE director of Campus Rights Advocacy; Aaron Terr, director of Public Advocacy; and Ronnie London, our general counsel.

Timestamps

0:00 Introduction

0:44 NetChoice oral arguments

19:39 Taylor Swift cease and desist letter

29:20 Publishing unlawfully obtained information

39:28 Harvard and doxxing

47:44 Princeton no contact orders

55:52 Columbia law denies recognition to Law Students Against Antisemitism

1:02:38 Columbia adopts Kalven Report

1:06:06 Indiana University art exhibit canceled, professor suspended

1:14:55 Satan in Iowa

1:21:59 Outro

Show Notes

"So to Speak" 2023-24 Supreme Court Preview (contains discussion of NetChoice cases)

Correspondence between Taylor Swift and Jack Sweeney's attorneys

Bartnicki v. Vopper (2001)

Princeton no contact order

Columbia university grants recognition to Law Students Against Antisemitism

IHRA definition of anti-Semitism

List of universities that have adopted the Kalven Report

Indiana University art exhibit story

Indiana University professor suspended for improper reservation

Iowa Satanism bill

Shurtleff v. Boston (2022)

"So to Speak": Substack

Transcript

Recent Episodes

Dodging censorship in Russia
Share